Primary immunodeficiency 061021 Flashcards
When should you be suspicious of immunodeficiency
atypical organisms, recurrent illness and 1 major illness in the year
Phagocyte deficiencies examples
o Infections:
Recurrent skin/mouth infections:
• Bacterial S. aureus, enteric bacteria
• Fungal candida, aspergillus fumigatus and flavus
Mycobacterial infection:
• Mycobacterium tuberculosis
• Atypical mycobacterium
Treatment of phagocyte deficiencies
Aggressive management of infection: • Infection prophylaxis o Antibiotics – e.g. Septrin o Anti-fungals – e.g. Itraconazole • Oral/intravenous antibiotics as needed Definitive therapy • Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (‘Replaces’ defective population) • Specific treatment for CGD (interferon gamma therapy)
What are the different type of innate immune deficiencies
failure of neutrophil differentiation (reticular dysgenesis, severe congenital neutropaenia (kostmann), cyclic neutropaenia) 2) failure to express leukocyte adhesion markers 3) chronic granulomatous disease 4) failure of cytokine production
What do deficiencies of NK cells lead to
HHV infections – HSV 1/2, VZV, EBV, CMV
HPV infection
Treatment in NK virus deficiencies
o Treatment – no good trial data:
Prophylactic aciclovir/ganciclovir Cytokines (IFN-a) to stimulate NK cytotoxic function
HSCT (severe phenotypes)
Leukocyte adhesion defiency
deficiency of CD18 (beta-2 integrin subunit):
o Normal = CD11a/CD18 (LFA-1) on neutrophils binds to ICAM-1 on endothelium for adhesion and transmigration
o LAD = neutrophils lack LFA-1:
Very high neutrophil count in blood Delayed umbilical cord separation at birth
Absence of pus formation
Chronic granulomatous disease
o Cause = absent respiratory burst:
Deficiency of one of components of NADPH oxidase
Inability to generate O2 free radicals so impaired killing
Signs of CGD
Excessive inflammation: • Persistent neutrophil/macrophage accumulation • Failure to degrade antigens Granuloma formation Lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly
Tests CGD
o Tests: DHR and NBT tests (both -ve in CGD)
NBT goes from yellow to blue with hydrogen peroxide
DHR oxidised to rhodamine with hydrogen peroxide
IFN gamma/IL12 network failure
o Particular issue for atypical organisms e.g. TB
o Cytokine deficiency; 1 of… IL-12, IL-12-r, IFNg, IFNg-r deficiency
o IL-12 to IFNg network important in control of mycobacteria infection:
Infection activates IL12-IFNg network
Infected macrophages produce IL12
IL12 induces T cells to secrete IFNg
IFNg feeds back to macrophages & neutrophils
Stimulates production of TNF
Activates NADPH oxidase oxidative pathways
What are the functions of complement
Increase vascular permeability / cell chemotaxis
Promote clearance of immune complexes
Opsonisation of pathogens to promote phagocytosis
Activate phagocytes
Promote mast cell/basophil degranulation
Form the MAC
What are the 3 complement pathways
MBL, Classical (antibodies), alternate (direct)
MBL deficiency
MBL2 mutations common but not usually associated with immunodeficiency
C1, C2, C4 deficiency
increased risk of SLE/autoimmunity
lack of phagocyte mediated clearance of apoptotic/necrotic cells means that self antigens are uncleared leading to autoimmunity
also lack of clearance of immune complexes leads to local inflammation in skin and kidneys
C3 nephritic factor deficiency
Associated with glomerulonephritis (membranoproliferative)
Associated with partial lipodystrophy
as c3 nephritic factor induces the lysis of adipocytes that secrete adipsin
Management complement deficiencies
o Vaccination (boost protection mediated by other arms of the immune system) Meningovax, Pneumovax and HIB vaccines o Prophylactic antibiotics o Treat infection aggressively o Screening of family members
What are the types of adaptive immune deficiency in T cells
Failure of lymphocyte precursors (severe combined immune deficncy), failure of thymic development (e.g. DiGeorge syndrome), failure of expression of HLA (Bare lymphocyte syndromes), failure of signalling (IFNg or receptor deficiency, IL12 or receptor deficiency)
Features of T cell deficiencies
o Viral infections (CMV)
o Fungal infection (Pneumocystis – CD4 T cell cytokines needed to control PCP; Cryptosporidium)
o Some bacterial infections (esp. intracellular organisms Mycobacteria tuberculosis, Salmonella)
o Early malignancy
Management of T cell deficiencies
o Aggressive prophylaxis/treatment of infection
o HSCT:
Replace abnormal populations in SCID
Replace abnormal cells – Bare Lymphocyte Syndrome Class II
o Enzyme replacement therapy:
PEG-ADA for ADA SCID
o Gene therapy:
Stem cells treated ex-vivo with viral vectors containing missing components
The transduced cells have survival advantage in vivo
o Thymic transplantation:
Promote T cell differentiation in Di George syndrome
Cultured donor thymic tissue transplanted to quadriceps muscle
x linked SCID
o 45% of all severe combined immunodeficiency X-linked so mostly in boys
o Mutation of common gamma chain on chromosome X (q13.1)
Shared by receptor for IL-2, IL-4, IL-7, IL-9, IL-15 and IL-21 inability to respond to cytokines…
Causes early arrest of T cell development and NK cell development and production of immature B cells
o Phenotype:
Very low or absent T cell numbers Early arrest
Very low or absent NK cell numbers Early arrest
Normal or increased B cell numbers Immature B-cells (cannot make Ig)
Very low Ig
ADA deficiency
o 16.5% of all severe combined immunodeficiency
o Adenosine Deaminase Deficiency (an enzyme that lymphocytes require for cell metabolism):
Inability to respond to cytokines
Causes early arrest of T cell development and NK cell development and production of no B cells
o Phenotype:
Very low or absent T cell numbers
Very low or absent NK cell numbers
Very low or absent B cell numbers KEY DIFFERENCE
Very low Ig
o In the first 3 months of life, the neonate is protected from SCID and ADA deficiency from:
IgG from the maternal placental supply
IgG from breast milk colostrum – however this is not as good and leads to eventual drop of IgG